Mourning AU Day – for now…

May 25, Africa Union (AU) Day, came and went last Saturday
without the honour of a holiday in Ghana.

For whatever reason(s), Ghana has decided to dispense with
the Day as a public holiday, relegating it to the status of just any other day
in the year!

AU Day’s death brings to mind another death, our own
Republic Day, July 1, also killed off.

International and multilateral relations, by nature, are
built on solid and strictly negotiated values – they have to – but they also
leave room for nuanced and symbolic gestures that go to enrich and enhance
those relationships. And so when Ghana hosted the meeting in Accra in 2003 for
the Organization of African Unity (OAU) to transform itself into the African Union
(AU), Ghana placed herself at the forefront of what Presidents like Thabo Mbeki,
Abdulai Wade, described as the African Renaissance. No wonder then, Ghana
became the first country to accede to the African Peer Review Mechanism (APRM)
that came out of this new thinking. President Kufuor received the highest accolades
and regards of his peers and citizens. We were all justifiably proud of our
leading role in the APRM.

Backtracking in history to March 6 1957, Ghana made the
solemn pledge, through the words of our Founder, Osagyefo Dr. Kwame Nkrumah,
that our independence would be meaningless if it was not linked to the total
liberation of the African continent. Ghana thus became the shining Black Star
of Africa and we have blazed that beacon ever since – well, until now…

When the OAU made way for the AU, one of the cardinal issues
raised was how the Union would make itself relevant to the ordinary African. If
it is ever possible for a situation to be both visceral and cerebral at the
same time, that was it. African leaders had to fashion out concepts that would let
their citizens buy into what this Union stood for and make it relevant in their
lives.

Member countries were exhorted to think out and implement
initiatives that would bring their citizens on board. I remember attending an AU
sponsored workshop in Yaounde, Cameroon for African media practitioners (December
2013) to deliberate on AU Agenda ’63 and come up with strategies that would
encourage citizens to buy into the Agenda and activities of the AU in general.
In submission after submission we were all agreed that the Union had become too
alienated from the people. In fact we came to the conclusion that political
leaders had failed in their duty of integrating their citizens into the affairs
of the Union. With the exception of politicians and civil servants, who would
flock to Addis for Summits, nobody else knew nor cared that much for this very
important multilateral organization. I recall jotting down the following points,
among others which found their way into our final declaration:

The AU
must be a union of people of Africa and not a private club for African heads of
state

Give
back the AU to the African people; the AU must therefore be “people-friendly”

The AU
must take a leading role in unleashing innovation, creativity and productivity
on the continent to engender development

The AU
must ensure a more engaging parliament, along the lines of the EU parliament to
involve the people through their representatives in the decision-making process
and set standards of relationships across the continent

Sub-regional
groupings must integrate and harmonize policies, for example, the free movement
of people across the continent and the means to do that, like reliable air
links, highways and railways

The “democracy dividend” must manifest in more
freedoms – e.g., of expression, all-inclusiveness, human rights and citizens’
self-actualization

Practical
Pan Africanism where history and lament are superseded by achievable and
sustainable African goals like the APRM, which currently seems to be in limbo

The decision to have a continental Day (holiday) was
therefore neither flippant nor capricious – it gave gravitas to African
Liberation Day. The Day would focus an entire continent’s peoples to recognise
not only the need for one another but also appreciate their common destiny.
Ghana, unsurprisingly was one of the countries that domesticated the AU Day
into its national calendar of holidays.

Some Countries like Namibia, did even better: They adopted
the AU anthem and flag into their protocols of state. When I was Ghana’s envoy
to that country (2014-2017), it was most moving and inspiring when any time the
Namibian national anthem was played, the AU anthem was struck up after. AU Day
was a special day for African diplomats as we used the holiday to ennoble our
continent with many activities. The highest point for all of us was the gala
dinner we would organize to round off the day. There were stands for each
country to showcase its cuisine and cultural artefacts. Ghana’s stand used to
be in high demand – what with our jollof, omo tuo, kelewele and waakye?!

Now, even if Ghanaian Missions were to participate in AU Day
activities, it would be hollow and without any feeling of belonging.

So, really, whose idea was it at all to abolish AU Day
holiday?

Could this be an attempt to dismantle the quest to create a “United
States of Africa” – the Pan African dream? Even if some people

cannot stomach the idea of a
super State – and I agree, many do not, what of continental solidarity that
could lead to developments in science, medicine, technology, architecture, the
arts, and much more? Why are we holding on to ECOWAS if we will not ennoble the
AU with a holiday?

It does not make sense! I have heard some people say it is an extension of the pathological hatred for our Founder, Osagyefo Dr. Kwame Nkrumah. At the AU, he remains the most celebrated African and as a mark of that recognition his statue has been erected in front of the AU Headquarters in Addis Ababa – an honour that is not likely to be extended to any other Ghanaian in the foreseeable future!

Osagyefuo’s statue at AU Headquaters

Some have also said it is a mark of the “right wing”
orientation of Ghana’s foreign policy, but honestly, I do not know…As I said at
the beginning of this article, international and multilateral relations have
room for nuance and symbolism: The AU Day holiday is one such and Ghana, of all
African countries to have turned her back on it, most certainly places us in a
situation at the family dinner table where we will at best be considered
outsiders, or at worst, imposters!

The Osagyefo (He initiated continental unity), President
Kufuor (He midwifed the AU into being) and President Mahama (He played a
pivotal role in the creation of the Continental Free Trade Area) must all be
terribly let down by this new disrespect for Africa that Ghana has displayed
with the relegation of the AU Day holiday… And the rest of us? Hopefully we
will not have to endure a long period of mourning because a different “mandate”
would see to the resurrection of AU Day and Republic Day holidays…

Ghana deserves better!

PS

The Cuban Embassy in Accra observed
Africa Liberation Day (AU Day) on Saturday, May 25, 2019 with activities at its
premises.